REPORT Nº 69/06

CASE 11.171

MERITS (PUBLICATION)

TOMÁS LARES CIPRIANO

GUATEMALA

October 21st, 2006

 

 

          I.        SUMMARY

 

1.    On June 24, 1993, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights received a petition presented by the Human Rights Office of the Archdiocese of Guatemala and by the International Human Rights Law Group (hereinafter “the petitioners”) alleging the responsibility of the State of Guatemala (hereinafter “the State,” “Guatemala”, or “the Guatemalan State”) for the violation, with prejudice to Tomás Lares Cipriano (hereinafter “the alleged victim”) of the rights provided for by Articles 4 (right to life), 5 (right to humane treatment), 7 (right to personal liberty), 8 (right to a fair trial), 16 (freedom of association) and 25 (right to judicial protection) of the American Convention on Human Rights (hereinafter “the Commission” or the “American Convention”), in connection with the general obligation on the part of the State to respect and guarantee the aforementioned rights, established by Article 1(1) of the same instrument.

 

2.      On February 27, 2002, during its 114th regular session and in its Report on Admissibility No. 13/02, the Commission found the case to be admissible regarding the alleged violations of Articles 4, 8, 16, 25 and 1(1) of the Convention, with the State of Guatemala allegedly responsible. The Commission found the alleged violations of Articles 5 and 7 of the Convention to be inadmissible.[1]

 

3.       In this report the Commission concluded that the State of Guatemala, with prejudice to Mr. Tomás Lares Cipriano, violated Articles 4, 5, 8 and 25 in connection with Article 1(1) of the American Convention.

 

          II.       PROCESSING BEFORE THE COMMISSION

 

4.     On February 27, 2002, the Commission approved the Report on Admissibility No. 13/02, regarding the alleged violations, by the State of Guatemala, of Articles 4, 8, 16, 25 and 1(1) of the Convention.

 

5.      On March 14, 2002, the Commission transmitted the Report on Admissibility to the parties, offering its assistance for the purpose of reaching a friendly settlement, and requested their response to this offer within thirty days.

 

6.      On May 9, 2002, the petitioners requested a thirty day extension of the deadline, in order to present their observations on the Report on Admissibility.

 

7.      On July 8, 2002, the Commission informed the petitioners of the State of Guatemala’s interest in initiating a dialogue towards reaching a friendly settlement, according to a communication from the State received on the same day.

 

8.      On December 8, 2003, the Commission informed the State of Guatemala that, given the lack of response of the petitioners, it was granting the State two months to present additional observations on the Report on Admissibility 13/02.

 

9.      On March 3, 2004, the State requested an extension to file its observations on the merits, which were presented in an April 16, 2004 communication. In this communication the State provides a summary of the judicial situation of the case and refers to the acknowledgement of institutional responsibility made by President Portillo on August 9, 2000. It further requests the IACHR to take note of the failure to act on the part of the petitioners during the merits stage, as well as of its intention to achieve a friendly settlement in this case.

 

III.      POSITIONS OF THE PARTIES

 

          A.         The Petitioners

 

10.      On February 19, 1993, according to the petitioners, three thousand members of the voluntary self-defense committees, belonging to several counties of the municipal seat of Joyabaj, Department of  Quiché, including Mr. Tomás Lares Cipriano, resigned from the committees before several civil authorities.[2]

 

11.      On March 26 of that same year, Messrs. Tomás Lares Cipriano, Diego Lares, Marcos Ambrosio Sacarías, Manuel Ambrosio Sacarías and Domingo Gutiérrez arrived at the Human Rights Office of the Archdiocese of Guatemala to report threats made against them by members of the civil self-defense patrols of the Joyabaj municipality. These threats were a response to their resignation from the self-defense committees. On that occasion, Mr. Tomás Lares Cipriano and his companions asserted that they had also been threatened with serious consequences – according to the petitioners the equivalent of a death threat – should they not attend a demonstration of civil patrolmen organized for March 28, 1993; to that end a roster would be prepared with the names of those not participating, who in turn would be accused of being members of organizations connected with the Unidad Revolucionaria Nacional Guatemalteca [Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unity].

 

12.       The seriousness of the report motivated the Human Rights Office of the Archdiocese of Guatemala to file a preventive habeas corpus petition before the Supreme Court, on behalf of Tomás Lares Cipriano and other persons who had resigned from the Patrulla de Autodefensa Civil [Civil Self-Defense Patrol] of Joyabaj.

 

13.       On April 30, approximately at 11:30 a.m., according to a communication from the Comité de Unidad Campesina (CUC) [Committee for Peasant Unity], Tomás Lares Cipriano “was ambushed and cowardly murdered: he received 6 gunshot wounds (2 bullets in the left hand, 1 bullet in the chest, 1 bullet between the eyes, 1 bullet in the head); his right ear was severed and his head smashed, after which he was decapitated.”[3]

 

14.       The CUC communication asserts that

 

the General Commander of the PACs (of Joyabaj), Leonel Nogales, has issued orders for the kidnapping of Mr. Tomás Lares Cipriano … simultaneously, Messrs. Catarino Juárez and Santos Chich Us, first and second leaders of the Chorraxaj county PACs, made up lists of all the residents  that are organized in cooperatives, religious activities and popular organizations …

 

15.       On May 19, 1993, at which time the murder of Tomás Lares Cipriano was public, [4] the Human Rights Office of the Archdiocese of Guatemala was notified of the decision by Judge Lic. [Licenciate] Roderico Haroldo López Robles of the Juzgado Segundo de Primera Instancia Penal del Quiché [Second Criminal Court of the First Instance of Quiché], regarding the petition for habeas corpus which the petitioners had filed.  The decision denied the request, stating that “the alleged victims are not in the situation provided for by Article 82 of the National Constituent Assembly’s Decree 1-86 [and] that they could not be found.”

 

16.       In the additional information and in their observations on the reports presented by the State during the proceedings before the IACHR, the petitioners asserted that on May 20, 1993, Mr. Diego Lares Ambrosio had filed a complaint against Próspero Leonel Ogaldez García, Santos Chich Us, Catarino Juárez, Diego Granillo Juárez, Santos Tzi and Gaspar López Chiquiaja, whom he alleged were responsible for the murder of Mr. Tomás Lares Cipriano.

 

17.       The petitioners reported that the civil self-defense patrolmen had prevented the practicing of the autopsy and that consequently they had requested from the Juzgado Segundo de Primera Instancia del Quiché [Second Court of the First Instance of Quiché]  the exhumation and autopsy of the body, procedures which were carried out on June 29, 1993.  Regarding the reconstruction of the events, a procedure which was ordered but which did not take place, the petitioners asserted that the threat of an ambush by members of the self-defense patrols was the real reason why this procedure was not carried out: it was not for the reason given by the State, i.e., that of bad weather.[5]

 

18.       The petitioners stated that on July 29, 1993, an arrest warrant was issued for the defendants, but that only Catarino Juárez and Gaspar López Chiquiaja were arrested and that Próspero Leonel Ogaldez García had appeared voluntarily before the Juzgado Segundo de Instrucción del Quiché [Second Magistrates’ Court of Quiché]. In their depositions the aforementioned individuals denied being members of the self-defense patrols, but the petitioners maintained that their membership was duly established in the proceedings, by both documentary evidence and witness testimony and was public. The judicial authority considered only the depositions of the defendants and their witnesses, omitting other evidentiary items. As a result, the judge decided not to rescind the orders for the release without conditions and the release on his own recognizance, respectively, of the defendants Próspero Leonel Ogaldez García and Catarino Juárez. Regarding Gaspar López Chiquiaja, the petitioners stated that the judge had ordered his release despite contradictory testimony of different witnesses. According to the petitioners, the prosecution did not have the opportunity to properly question the witnesses for the defense and that there were additional procedural anomalies.[6]

 

19.        With respect to the arrest warrant issued on July 29, 1993 against Santos Chich Us, Diego Granillo Juárez and Santos Tzi, the petitioners asserted that it was not carried out, notwithstanding that these persons remained in their communities. For the petitioners, this order was not executed was due to the fear on the part of the police of the threats made against them by members of Military Zone No. 20. According to the complainants, the Chief of Police of the Quiché had apparently stated that he would rather to go to jail for disobeying orders than be killed.

 

20.         The petitioners also asserted that in January 1994 a new judge was appointed to the Juzgado Segundo de Primera Instancia del Quiché [Second Court of the First Instance of Quiché], his predecessor having been dismissed under charges of corruption. They also stated that the records of the court had been set on fire on January 19, and that the judge had reported that the fire could have been set by members of the patrols and that he himself was the target of their threats. The petitioners further stated that the Army of Guatemala and, especially, the Commander of Military Zone No. 20 of the Quiché, were abettors and accessories after the fact of the criminal actions occurred.

 

21.         The petitioners stated that the State had not taken the necessary steps to fulfill the arrest warrants[7], which remained pending after more than six years against three of the principal defendants in connection with the death of Tomás Lares Cipriano, and that this failure represented an omission attributable to the State, which, in denying justice, incurred in international responsibility.

 

22.        Lastly, the petitioners contended that the State of Guatemala has not complied with its commitments to remedy the situation of the Quiché community, to which the alleged victim belonged: some of its inhabitants have been forced to give up their land to former PAC members, facing extreme hunger, disease and poverty.

 

          B.         The State

 

23.      The State of Guatemala stated in its initial response that an investigation has been started as part of Proceedings No. 79-93 in the Juzgado Segundo de Primera Instancia Penal de Instrucción [Second Criminal Magistrates’ Court of the First Instance] and that several procedures towards clarifying the facts were pending.  It further informed the IACHR that the Ministry of National Defense and the Office of the Attorney General had been instructed to investigate the case and to move the proceedings forward.[8]

 

24.       The State later presented more detailed information and asserted that its preliminary investigation had established that Mr. Tomás Lares Cipriano had resigned from the Civil Self-Defense Patrols on March 26, 1993; that on the 28th of that month had taken part in an organized demonstration for their dissolution and that, as a result, he had received death threats from members of these organizations.[9]

 

25.       Regarding judicial proceedings, the State informed the IACHR that on May 1, 1993, the Justice of the Peace of the Municipality of Joyabaj had issued an order for committal proceedings and had requested the National Police to start the necessary enquiries. On May 3 of that same year the aforementioned judge disqualified himself from hearing the case arguing incompetence and referred the proceedings to the Juzgado Segundo de Primera Instancia Penal de Instrucción [Second Criminal Magistrates’ Court of the First Instance]. On May 12, the Office of the Prosecutor joined the proceedings based on a complaint filed by the son of Mr. Tomás Lares Cipriano.  

 

26.        The State further informed the IACHR that on February 20, 1993, Mr. Domingo Lares Ambrosio, son of the victim, had filed a complaint against Santos Chich Us, Leonel Ogaldes and Catarino Juárez.[10] The judge then ordered committal proceedings, and the Office of the Prosecutor joined the proceedings after being notified of the complaint. Subsequently several procedures were carried out[11], up to the moment of the prosecution’s request for Leonel Ogaldez García, Santos Chich Us, Catarino Juárez, Diego Granillo Juárez, Santos Tzi and Gaspar López Chiquiaja to be remanded in custody. Catarino Juárez was arrested on August 3, and on that same day he rendered his deposition; two days later, on August 5, and after hearing the testimony of the witnesses for the defense, he was granted pre-trial release for lack of grounds for preventive detention.  On August 9, Próspero Leonel Ogaldez García made a voluntary appearance for his deposition. After hearing the witnesses for the defense, the judge ordered his release without bail for lack of grounds for preventive detention. The Office of the Prosecutor appealed the orders for the release of the defendants. They were upheld however, by the Court of Appeals, but this Court also ordered Catarino Juárez not to leave the country.

 

27.        The State also informed the IACHR that Gaspar López Chiquiaj was taken into custody on October 17, 1993 pursuant to a court order. On October 21, after hearing the depositions of the defendant and his witnesses, the judge ordered his pre-trial release. This decision was challenged by the Office of the Prosecutor on October 22 and the Court of Appeals overturned the order for pre-trial release, entailing the obligation of the judge of the case to remand the defendant in custody.

 

28.        In another communication[12], in response to an observation made by the petitioners, corrected the date of Tomás Lares Cipriano’s resignation from the Civil Self-Defense Patrols: Not February 26, but February 19, 1993. It also stated that the autopsy had been ordered by the Justice of the Peace, but that it had not been carried out because the assistant mayors of the county of Chorraxaj opposed it, and the children of the deceased, along with a multitude of 400 people armed with machetes, prevented the body from being taken to the morgue. [13]  For this reason it was not until later that the body was exhumed and the autopsy practiced. Regarding the reconstruction of the events, the State asserted that it had not been carried out due to bad weather. [14]

 

29.       With respect to the other defendants who were granted pre-trial release, the State asserted that those actions were legal and based on a reasonable appreciation of facts and evidence available to the judicial authorities. Likewise, the State contended, it was necessary for the complainants to provide evidence in the proceedings and that the aforementioned investigation was the means provided by the new Code of Criminal Procedure for the satisfaction of justice. The State also invoked Article 37 of the (former) IACHR Rules of Procedure, contending that the complainants should first exhaust the remedies provided for by due process in their domestic jurisdiction.

 

30.       Regarding the warrants for the arrest of Santos Chich Us, Diego Granillo Juárez and Santos Tzi, the State informed the IACHR that it had requested the Ministry of the Interior and the Office of the Director General of the National Police to arrest the aforementioned persons and take them before the judge of the case.

 

31.       With respect to the information provided by the petitioners regarding a fire affecting the records of court that was hearing the case, the State informed the IACHR that it had instituted Proceedings No. 127-94, within which the Office of the General Prosecutor ordered an enquiry and that the investigation was being carried out by the Office of the Director General of the National Police.

 

32.      In subsequent communications to the IACHR, the Government stated that on May 10, 1995, the Juzgado Primero de Primera Instancia Penal [First Criminal Court of the First Instance] of Huehuetenango had issued a bill of indictment against Santos Chich Us under Case 758-93 for the murder of Tomás Lares Cipriano and that, after the relevant procedures were carried out, on November 5, 1996 the aforementioned person had been given a 28-year non-commutable prison sentence.  The sentence became final after the Sala Novena de Apelaciones [Ninth Chamber of Appeals] denied, on December 4, 1996, a special appeal filed by the defense.

 

33.       The State also informed the IACHR that the arrest warrants issued on July 30, 1993 and reissued on May 6, 1995 against another four persons charged with the death of Tomás Lares Cipriano were pending execution. On December 28, 1998, the State, acting through the Presidential Commission on Human Rights, reiterated to the Office of the Director General of the National Police the need to speed up their efforts to ensure compliance with the warrants for the arrest of Diego Granillo Juárez, Santos Tzit y Gaspar López Chiquiaj.

 

34.       In its communication to the IACHR of August 24, 1999, the Guatemalan Government reaffirmed its contention that domestic remedies had not been exhausted. It requested that the Commission disregard the petitioners’ claim that the delay in the effective execution of the arrest warrants against three of the defendants qualified as an exception to the requirement of exhaustion of domestic remedies, based on the premise that the domestic procedures evidenced a denial of justice. The State assured the IACHR that it was making its utmost effort to arrest the persons for whom the warrants had been issued.
 

Acknowledgement by the State of its responsibility
 

35.       On August 9, 2000, in the city of Guatemala and in the presence of the President and Executive Secretary of the IACHR, the President of the Republic, Dr. Alfonso Portillo stated that his Administration:

 

 [a]acknowledges the institutional responsibility of the State for noncompliance with the obligation, found in Article 1(1) of the American Convention, to respect and guarantee the rights contained by the Convention and Articles 1, 2 and 3 of the Constitution of Guatemala with respect to the following persons or cases:

 

3. Tomás Lares Cipriano (IACHR 11171)

….

The aforementioned acknowledgement is based on the omission on the part of the State regarding its obligation to guarantee all persons the enjoyment of and respect for their fundamental rights, in compliance with the Constitution of Guatemala, the American Convention on Human Rights and other international instruments signed and ratified by Guatemala …

 

[t]he Guatemalan Government does not dispute the events that gave rise to the filing of the petitions before the Commission … and pledges to begin negotiations regarding these cases. 

 

36.      In the last communication received by the Commission, the State reiterates the aforementioned acknowledgement of institutional responsibility for the violations of fundamental guarantees committed in the Tomás Lares Cipriano case, but makes no reference to any other events, or to the measures adopted to remedy the acknowledged noncompliance with its obligations.

 

IV.      EXAMINATION OF THE MERITS

 

          A.      Preliminary considerations

 

          1.       Regarding the acknowledgement by the State of its institutional responsibility

 

37.        The Commission notes that the acknowledgement by the State of its institutional responsibility for failure to comply with the obligations imposed by Article 1(1) of the Convention, with prejudice to Tomás Lares Cipriano, made by the President of the Republic of Guatemala on August 9, 2000 and reaffirmed by the State in its communication of April 15, 2004,[15] has full legal value according to principles of international law. [16] To be noted that in the aforementioned acknowledgement the State pledged to follow up and to promote the investigation of the facts.
 

38.        In addition, the Commission notes that the declaration acknowledging institutional responsibility, also contains the State’s acknowledgement of the facts reported by the petitioners, events which, in any case, have been properly established by different evidentiary items collected during the processing of the instant case before the Commission.

 

39.       Notwithstanding the above, the Commission notes that, from said date onward, the State failed to adopt measures to comply with the obligation undertaken to prosecute and punish all those responsible; and that the family members of the victim have not received any compensation.

 

          2.       Regarding the State’s intention of reaching a friendly settlement

 

40.       During the processing of the case before the Commission, the State asserted its wish to begin a procedure for friendly settlement.  This it did in its declaration of August 9, 2000, in its communication of July 8, 2002 and in its observations on the merits.  For its part, in its communications notifying the Report on Admissibility No. 13/02, the Commission offered its assistance to the parties for the purpose of reaching a friendly settlement of the matter, pursuant to Article 48(1)(f) of the American Convention. The petitioners, for their part, did not respond to the State’s expressions of its wish for a settlement.  Consequently, notwithstanding the State’s conveyed wishes, in this case a friendly settlement procedure could not take place.

 

41.       In light of the foregoing considerations, the Commission now proceeds to examine and decide on the merits of the instant case.

 

B.       Facts

 

42.       In accordance with the acknowledgement of responsibility by the State and the evidence collected in the instant case, the Commission finds that the facts enumerated below (following a description of their context), are fully established

 

          A.      Context

 

43.       Between the years of 1962 and 1996 there was an armed conflict in Guatemala, at great human, material, institutional and moral cost. The victims of arbitrary executions and forced disappearances resulting from the political violence during this period have been estimated at over two hundred thousand.[17]

 

44.       The armed conflict had multiple causes. The CEH found that:

 

… other parallel phenomena, such as structural injustice, the closing of political spaces, racism, the increasing exclusionary and anti-democratic nature of institutions, as well as the reluctance to promote substantive reforms that could have reduced structural conflicts, are the underlying factors which determined the origin and subsequent outbreak of the armed confrontation. [18]

 

45.        The CEH concluded that the State forces and related paramilitary groups, specifically the PACs, were responsible for 93% of the violations documented by its investigation, including 92% of the arbitrary executions and 91% of the forced disappearances. The CEH also attributed to the armed insurgent groups[19] 3% of the recorded violations. It was not possible to obtain information establishing responsibilities for the remaining 4% of the violations.

 

46.       Peace negotiations were initiated in 1990 and were completed in 1996. This process was intended to overcome the armed conflict, which had lasted more than 34 years. The parties, the Government of the Republic of Guatemala and the URNG, with the participation of a wide-ranging Asamblea de la Sociedad Civil [Civil Society Assembly], signed twelve agreements during this period.[20]

 

47.       It is appropriate to emphasize in particular that in 1993, year in which the events of this case took place, the peace negotiations had been set back and were stagnated. Because of this, the violence produced by the armed conflict, still the object of negotiations within the peace process, continued in Guatemalan national life through the actions of the counterinsurgency structures created, such as the Civil Self-Defense Patrols, or the Voluntary Defense Committees, which attacked the civil population,[21] including members of their own ranks, as a mechanism to punish desertion or refusal to join them.
 

          B.       Established facts

 

            1.        The death of Tomás Lares Cipriano

 

48.      Tomás Lares Cipriano, a 55 year-old farmer, was a member of the Consejo de Comunidades Etnicas "Runujel Junam" (CERJ) [Council of Ethnic Communities “Runujel Junam”] and of the Comité de Unidad Campesina (CUC) [Committee for Peasant Unity]. As an active community leader of his town, Chorraxá Joyabaj, El Quiché, he had organized numerous demonstrations against the presence of the army in his zone and against the apparently voluntary, but in fact compulsory, service of the peasants in the so-called Civil Self-Defense Patrols (PACs).  In addition, he also filed numerous complaints regarding threats made against the local population by Military Commissioners, acting as civil agents of the army, patrol leaders and, occasionally, as soldiers.

 

49.       On February 19, 1993, three thousand members tendered their public resignation from the Voluntary Self-defense Committees before civil authorities[22]; among them was Tomás Lares Cipriano. [23] In the document of resignation, the resigning members stated:

 

1. That since the 1980s we have been serving without pay in the Civil Patrol, today called “Voluntary Civil Defense Committee,” which in practice is completely compulsory in our communities: the Patrol Leaders, military commissioners in our communities, who follow the orders of the military detachment in our municipality tell us that if we don’t become members of the Civil Patrols, that is because we are guerrillas and that we should leave our homes and take our children into the jungle; otherwise one day we will be murdered.

 

2. In addition, we are forced by the leaders of the Civil Patrols to bring firewood to the military detachment … because of the threats and intimidations, i.e., to save our lives, it is that we have been participating with the Civil Patrols …

(…)

 

4. This very difficult situation has tired us so much that we have decided to resign from the Civil Patrols, under the protection of Article 34 of the Constitution which literally provides in its second paragraph NOBODY IS UNDER THE OBLIGATION TO ASSOCIATE WITH OR TO FORM PART OF GROUPS OR ASSOCIATIONS OF SELF-DEFENSE OR ANY OTHER SIMILAR ORGANIZATION …[24]

 

50.        The resignation was published in different media, inter alia, El Gráfico on February 24, 1993;  Prensa Libre, on February 25, 1993, Siglo Veintiuno, on February 25 and 26, 1993.[25]
 

51.       The February 25, 1993 edition of the newspaper Siglo Veintiuno, contains statements made by the Minister of Defense, José Domingo Samayoa, in which he claims that the alleged resignation of the patrolmen is something very carefully set up, just a hoax, an act of manipulation by the insurgency that takes place year after year  en the Quiché region.[26]

 

52.       On March 16, 1993, Tomás Lares Cipriano lodged a complaint against the Leader of the Civil Self-defense Patrols of his county, Catarino Juárez, with the Office of the Ombudsman for Human Rights (PDH) in the city of Santa Cruz del Quiché. Mr. Lares asserted that he feared for his life and requested the aid of the PDH, because the patrol leader was accusing him of organizing guerrilla meetings, under the pretext of community work. [27]

 

53.       On March 19, 1993, the Committee for Peasant Unity (CUC) reported in a press release that “the security of [their] brethren, who voluntarily abandoned the civil defense patrols is currently threatened by the announcements made by the commanders and the patrol leaders in the last few days, to the point of asserting that they are going to kidnap the community leaders.” In particular, it also reported that the general commander of the Civil Self-defense Patrols, Leonel Nogales, had issued orders for the kidnapping of Mr. Tomás Lares Cipriano, who made several statements to the press regarding the massive resignation from the PACs. [28]

 

54.         On March 26 of that same year, some of the persons who had resigned from the Voluntary Self-defense Committees on February 19, including Mr. Tomás Lares Cipriano, appeared before the Human Rights Office of the Archdiocese of Guatemala, to report different threats made against them by some of the civil self-defense patrols in the Municipality of Joyabaj, Department of Quiché, for having resigned from those committees. [29] They also reported that on March 28 there would be a demonstration of civil patrolmen and that they had received threats from the patrols, in an attempt to force them to attend. Should they not participate, they would be opening themselves to being accused of belonging to the Unidad Revolucionaria Nacional Guatemalteca.

 

55.        On the same March 26th, the Human Rights Office of the Archdiocese of Guatemala filed a habeas corpus petition on behalf of, inter alia, Tomás Lares Cipriano, Diego Lares, and Marcos Ambrosio Sacarías, in order to protect their lives and physical integrity. [30] In said petition, they requested the court:

 

to guarantee the physical integrity of the members who resigned from the self-defense patrols, in view of the threats which have been made against them…

 

to immediately adopt the necessary measures to protect the life, integrity and freedom of the aforementioned persons.

 

to order the competent judge to travel to the Municipality of Joyabaj … on Sunday, March 28 … and ensure that no illegal arrests be carried out or threats made against those persons who refuse to serve in the Civil Self-defense Patrols…

 

56.       On April 30 of that same year, Tomás Lares Cipriano was ambushed and murdered by Santos Chich Us, Leonel Olgadez, Catarino Juárez, Diego Granillo Juárez, Santos Tzit and Gaspar López Chiquiaj, [31] all members of the PACs. The body had two gunshot wounds in the left hand, one between the eyes and another in the head, a mutilated right ear, a fractured skull, and a severance of the head. [32]

 

57.     On May 1, 1993, Domingo Lares Ambrosio, son of the victim, reported the murder to the National Police and informed them where the body could be found.  The police authorities notified the judge on duty of the municipality of Joyabaj, Department of El Quiché, who in the company of the complainant traveled to the Cruzchich village in his jurisdiction, where the body of the victim was indeed found and identified. [33]

 

58.       On May 11, 1993, the Supreme Court of Justice denied the petition of habeas corpus, which had been filed previously by the petitioners, on the grounds that the persons on whose behalf it had been filed could not be found, but without mentioning the murder of Tomás Lares Cipriano, which by that time was public.[34]

 

          2.       The domestic judicial investigation

 

59.      According to the information provided by the State, on May 3, 1993, the Juzgado Segundo de Primera Instancia Penal de El Quiché [Second Criminal Court of the First Instance of El Quiché] instituted proceedings related to the murder of Tomás Lares Cipriano, under Case No. 758-93.

 

60.       On June 29, 1993, the body was exhumed and the autopsy was practiced in the cemetery of the Chorroxaj hamlet, in the Municipality of Joyabaj. According to a July 1 communication signed by Dr. Lissette García de Crocker, the physician who carried out the autopsy, the causes of the death of Tomás Lares Cipriano were severe damage to the brain, multiple skull fractures, gunshot wounds and knife injuries to the neck.[35]

 

61.      On July 30, 1993, the Juzgado Segundo de Primera Instancia Penal de El Quiché [Second Criminal Court of the First Instance of El Quiché] issued an arrest warrant against Santos Chich Us, Leonel Ogaldez, Catarino Juárez, Diego Granadillo Juárez, Santos Tzit and Gaspar López Chiquiaj, all charged with the murder of Tomás Lares Cipriano.[36]

 

62.       On August 3, 1993, the National Police arrested Catarino Juárez, who was questioned that same day in the Second Criminal Court of the First Instance.[37] On August 5, 1993 depositions were taken from Messrs. Roberto Juárez Morante, Julio Terano Villatoro and from Rosa Ramos Sánchez, witnesses for the defense proposed by Catarino Juárez. On that day the Judge also ordered the release of defendant Juárez because in his judgment there were insufficient grounds to order preventive detention.[38]

 

63.       On August 9, 1993 Mr. Leonel Ogaldez voluntarily appeared before the Second Criminal Court of the First Instance, asserted in his deposition that he had not taken part in the crime he was charged with and, according to the State, “based on the evidence [the judge] decided to rescind the arrest warrant against [him].”[39]

 

64.       On October 17, 1993, the National Police arrested Mr. Gaspar López Chiquiaj. On October 21, 1993, the Second Judge of the First Instance heard the depositions of the witnesses for the defense Domingo Ramírez Hernández, Gaspar Quixa de la Cruz, José Hernández and Alejandro López Chiquiaj.  On that same day the Judge of the First Instance ordered the pre-trial release of defendant López Chiquiaj, and ordered him not to leave the country. On October 22 of the same year, the Office of the Public Prosecutor appealed this decision. On April 14, 1994, the Sala Novena de la Corte de Apelaciones de Antigua Guatemala [Ninth Chamber of the Court of Appeals of Antigua Guatemala] ruled to overturn the appealed order.[40]

 

65.       On December 12, 1994, the Office of the Public Prosecutor requested the Second Criminal Court of the First Instance to issue a warrant for the arrest of Alejandro López Chiquiaj, as allegedly responsible for the death of Tomás Lares Cipriano. The warrant was issued on December 22, 1994.[41]

 

66.      On May 6, 1995, the warrants for the arrest of Messrs. Diego Granadillo Juárez, Santos Tzit and Gaspar López were re-issued.

 

67.       On May 10, 1995, the Juzgado Primero de Primera Instancia Penal de Huehuetenango [First Criminal Court of the First Instance of Huehuetenango] issued a bill of indictment against the defendant Santos Chich Us for the murder of Mr. Tomás Lares Cipriano.

 

68.        On November 5, 1996, the Tribunal de Sentencia de El Quiché [Trial Court of El Quiché] gave Mr. Santos Chich Us a 28-year non-commutable prison sentence.

 

69.       On December 4, 1996 the Ninth Chamber of Appeals denied a special appeal filed by the defense of Santos Chich Us and consequently the defendant’s sentence became final. The convict was transferred to the jurisdiction of the Juzgado Primero de Ejecución Penal [First Court for the Execution of Sentences] of the City of Guatemala, on January 6, 1997.[42]

 

70.       According to the information provided by the State on April 16, 2004, the warrants for the arrest of Diego Granadillo Juárez, Santos Tzit and  Gaspar López have yet to be carried out, as they are, according to the State, fugitives from justice.

 

C.      Considerations of law

 

          1.       The right to life

 

71.       Article 4(1) American Convention provides that:

 

[e]very person has the right to have his life respected. This right shall be protected by law and, in general, from the moment of conception. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his life.

 

72.       The right to life constitutes the essential basis for the exercise of all other rights.  Compliance with Article 4, in connection with Article 1(1) of the American Convention, not only assumes that no person shall be deprived of his life arbitrarily (negative obligation), but also requires that the States adopt all the proper measures to protect and preserve the right to life (positive obligation). In this regard, the Inter-American Court has stated the following:

 

The right to life is a fundamental human right, and the exercise of this right is essential for the exercise of all other human rights.  If it is not respected, all rights lack meaning.  Owing to the fundamental nature of the right to life, restrictive approaches to it are inadmissible.  In essence, the fundamental right to life includes, not only the right of every human being not to be deprived of his life arbitrarily, but also the right that he will not be prevented from having access to the conditions that guarantee a dignified existence.  States have the obligation to guarantee the creation of the conditions required in order that violations of this basic right do not occur and, in particular, the duty to prevent its agents from violating it.[43]
 

73.       The Human Rights Committee, created by the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, established that [t]he protection against arbitrary deprivation of life, which is explicitly required by the third paragraph of Article 6.1 [of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights] is of paramount importance.  The Committee considers that States parties should take measures not only to prevent and punish deprivation of life by criminal acts, but also to prevent arbitrary killing by their own security forces.  The deprivation of life by the authorities of the State is a matter of utmost gravity.  Therefore, [the State] must strictly control and limit the circumstances in which [a person] may be deprived of his life by such authorities. [44]

 

74.       According to the established facts, accepted by the State in the instant case, Tomás Lares Cipriano was murdered by members of the Civil Defense Patrols of Joyabaj. The PACs appeared at the beginning of the 1980s as groups of civilians forcibly organized by the armed forces, which intended to isolate the guerrilla movement and control the communities. In April 1983 they were legally recognized by Government Decision 222-83 which created the Jefatura Nacional de Coordinación y Control de la Autodefensa Civil [National Headquarters for the Coordination and Control of Civil Self-defense], hierarchically subordinated to the military authorities. The central objectives of the PACs were to organize the civil population against the guerrilla movements and to achieve physical and psychological control over the population; they had considerable impact on the Guatemalan social structures, especially in the predominantly indigenous rural areas.[45]

 

75.       In 1986 the PACs were renamed Comités Voluntarios de Defensa Civil (CVDC) [Voluntary Civil Defense Committees]; this change, however, was purely nominal and they continued to be called PACs and to be part of the Army’s counterinsurgency strategy. [46] Its members continued to be subordinated to the armed forces.

 

76.       Regarding the people’s membership with the PACs, notwithstanding that it was theoretically voluntary, but in practice, on many occasions, it was achieved forcibly, and on many others it became a survival mechanism for the civil population.[47]

 

77.        The forced involvement of the civil population in the domestic armed conflict through the PACs was greater by far in those departments with a larger Maya population.[48]

 

78.       The Commission concludes that the murder of Tomás Lares Cipriano by the PACs had a double connotation: on the one hand, as a direct retaliation for his community activities; particularly for having led the movement for the massive resignation of patrolmen that took place on February 25, 1993 in Joyabaj. These resignations were said by the Minister of Defense to be the result of a manipulation on the part of the guerrilla.  On the other hand, the murder was a message of terror sent both to the other leaders of the movement and to the patrolmen who were considering the possibility of resigning from the PACs.

 

          Responsibility of the Guatemalan State for violations committed by the Civil Self-Defense Patrols

 

79.         The Commission for Historical Clarification (hereinafter the “CEH”[49] concluded in its report that “[t]he State is responsible for the violations committed by the PACs to the degree that they acted organized by it, in compliance with its orders, or because of the power delegated to them by the State, or with its acquiescence, knowledge or tolerance, and were under hierarchical control and supervision. The State is also responsible for the failure to investigate, prosecute or punish the individuals responsible in each case.”   [50]

 

80.         In the Blake Case, the Court found that the the State of Guatemala’s support for or acquiescence to the actions of control and repression carried out by the civil patrols allows the conclusion that these patrols should be considered as agents of the State and, consequently, their actions are attributable to the latter. [51]  In this respect, the Court stated:

 

This institutional relationship was visible in the very decree creating these Civil Defense Committees (CDC), and in the 1996 Guatemala Peace Agreements, which established that the CDCs, "including those previously demobilized, would cease all institutional relations with the Guatemalan Army and would not be reassembled in a way that would restore that relationship" (not underlined in the original) (Agreement on the Strengthening of the Civil Authority and Function of the Army in a Democratic Society, para. 61). More particularly, Decree 143-96 of the Congress of the Republic of Guatemala of November 28, 1996, which rescinded Decree-Law 19-86, which had legally established the Civil Defense Committees, stated in one of its "Considering" that: the function of some civil self-defense patrols, now known as Voluntary Civil Defense Committees, had been perverted over the years... and that they had fulfilled missions belonging to the regular State organs, provoking repeated human rights violations by members of those committees (no underlining in the original).[52]

 

81.             At the time of the extrajudicial execution of Tomás Lares Cipriano, the civil patrols were acting as agents of the State. In fact, as of the 30 of 1993 both the military commissioners and the civil self defense patrols were in operation and were hierarchically subordinated to the Army, not only by statute but de facto. In the Blake Case, the Court concluded that:

 

the civil patrols enjoyed an institutional relationship with the Army, performed activities in support of the armed forces' functions, and, moreover, received resources, weapons, training and direct orders from the Guatemalan Army and operated under its supervision. A number of human rights violations, including summary and extrajudicial executions and forced disappearances of persons, have been attributed to those patrols. [53]

 

82.        Regarding the international responsibility of States for acts committed by its agents, the Inter-American Court established in 1988 the following:

 

Thus, in principle, any violation of rights recognized by the Convention carried out by an act of public authority or by persons who use their position of authority is imputable to the State.  However, this does not define all the circumstances in which a State is obligated to prevent, investigate and punish human rights violations, nor all the cases in which the State might be found responsible for an infringement of those rights.  An illegal act which violates human rights and which is initially not directly imputable to a State (for example, because it is the act of a private person or because the person responsible has not been identified) can lead to international responsibility of the State, not because of the act itself, but because of the lack of due diligence to pre